user@.service elogind user@.service 5 user@.service user-runtime-dir@.service System units to manager user processes user@UID.service user-runtime-dir@UID.service user-UID.slice Description The elogind1 system manager (PID 1) starts user manager instances as user@UID.service, where the user's numerical UID is used as the instance identifier. Each elogind --user instance manages a hierarchy of its own units. See elogind1 for a discussion of elogind units and elogind.special1 for a list of units that form the basis of the unit hierarchies of system and user units. user@UID.service is accompanied by the system unit user-runtime-dir@UID.service, which creates the user's runtime directory /run/user/UID, and then removes it when this unit is stopped. User processes may be started by the user@.service instance, in which case they will be part of that unit in the system hierarchy. They may also be started elsewhere, for example by sshd8 or a display manager like gdm, in which case they form a .scope unit (see elogind.scope5). Both user@UID.service and the scope units are collected under a user-UID.slice. Individual user-UID.slice slices are collected under user.slice, see elogind.special8. Controlling resources for logged-in users Options that control resources available to logged-in users can be configured at a few different levels. As described in the previous section, user.slice contains processes of all users, so any resource limits on that slice apply to all users together. The usual way to configure them would be through drop-ins, e.g. /etc/elogind/system/user.slice.d/resources.conf. The processes of a single user are collected under user-UID.slice. Resource limits for that user can be configured through drop-ins for that unit, e.g. /etc/elogind/system/user-1000.slice.d/resources.conf. If the limits should apply to all users instead, they may be configured through drop-ins for the truncated unit name, user-.slice. For example, configuration in /etc/elogind/system/user-.slice.d/resources.conf is included in all user-UID.slice units, see elogind.unit5 for a discussion of the drop-in mechanism. When a user logs in and a .scope unit is created for the session (see previous section), the creation of the scope may be managed through pam_elogind8. This PAM module communicates with elogind8 to create the session scope and provide access to hardware resources. Resource limits for the scope may be configured through the PAM module configuration, see pam_elogind8. Configuring them through the normal unit configuration is also possible, but since the name of the slice unit is generally unpredictable, this is less useful. In general any resources that apply to units may be set for user@UID.service and the slice units discussed above, see elogind.resource-control5 for an overview. Examples Hierarchy of control groups with two logged in users $ elogind-cgls Control group /: -.slice ├─user.slice │ ├─user-1000.slice │ │ ├─user@1000.service │ │ │ ├─pulseaudio.service │ │ │ │ └─2386 /usr/bin/pulseaudio --daemonize=no │ │ │ └─gnome-terminal-server.service │ │ │ └─init.scope │ │ │ ├─ 4127 /usr/libexec/gnome-terminal-server │ │ │ └─ 4198 zsh │ │ … │ │ └─session-4.scope │ │ ├─ 1264 gdm-session-worker [pam/gdm-password] │ │ ├─ 2339 /usr/bin/gnome-shell │ │ … │ │ ├─session-19.scope │ │ ├─6497 sshd: zbyszek [priv] │ │ ├─6502 sshd: zbyszek@pts/6 │ │ ├─6509 -zsh │ │ └─6602 elogind-cgls --no-pager │ … │ └─user-1001.slice │ ├─session-20.scope │ │ ├─6675 sshd: guest [priv] │ │ ├─6708 sshd: guest@pts/6 │ │ └─6717 -bash │ └─user@1001.service │ ├─init.scope │ │ ├─6680 /usr/lib/elogind/elogind --user │ │ └─6688 (sd-pam) │ └─sleep.service │ └─6706 /usr/bin/sleep 30 … User with UID 1000 is logged in using gdm (session-4.scope) and ssh1 (session-19.scope), and also has a user manager instance running (user@1000.service). User with UID 1001 is logged in using ssh (session-20.scope) and also has a user manager instance running (user@1001.service). Those are all (leaf) system units, and form part of the slice hierarchy, with user-1000.slice and user-1001.slice below user.slice. User units are visible below the user@.service instances (pulseaudio.service, gnome-terminal-server.service, init.scope, sleep.service). Default user resource limits $ systemctl cat user-1000.slice # /usr/lib/elogind/system/user-.slice.d/10-defaults.conf # … [Unit] Description=User Slice of UID %j After=elogind-user-sessions.service [Slice] TasksMax=33% The user-UID.slice units by default don't have a unit file. The resource limits are set through a drop-in, which can be easily replaced or extended following standard drop-in mechanisms discussed in the first section. See Also elogind1, elogind.service5, elogind.slice5, elogind.resource-control5, elogind.exec5, elogind.special7, pam8